Listowel Standard, 10 Apr 1903, p. 2

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. Satesttve. hi Red Heart 'Black Arrow A Tale of the Rolling 'Wave Daveboensint deaaaeil CHAPTER XI. You place upon me ao very hea bry 4 as captain of thi ssel," I said, <Spest = long pause. Do I uniorneat = to bring charge of murder "oruiiat Zavertal ae Enriquez 2 did meuns ; I have not ade- quate evidence to, substantiate one,"' plied Kennard. ¢'I by -- him -- move With a man of unkard's cmant. I padi that Garcertet intended a to slip the rest of the party.' "Preparing the ground again--by hetiine him drink himself ill,"' I hazarded "Precisely ; you have any trouble iquez ?°' T told him of the man's reafipear- ance at the bn. of the landing- steps, of the pointed rav agg = the suddenly cl to -Einglish, of the ial Li hiliar nel the ich the stowaway nds the same way, you sce o danger ahead from or i . cal Kenna' "And so yo not vo hag whete you heard 'the vc voice Lie! No.; I can't place al "Well, a try to plac 'him for proceeded | Kennard, i hi n't tell me when e are due to leave Genoa "We arrive there at noon to-mor- row, barring accidents, a leave the same time the following day,"' 1 replied, "Then I think that within forty- eight -- I shall be able to tell you e you met the stowaway before "And now you have been here long .cnough. going to 're cove: his ufternoon, so we © shall tneet at the dinner-table ; b t other times it will be well for us to be seen together as little as pos- sible. Bay = work in my ow u shall ibe posted | in 'all. fresh. "toveboriaenta On leaving Ke nnard's cabin I Went straight to my own r shut myself in to review tion I co Nothing to be done. The American unself bad, ol I should make of myself used Zavertal of being t a safely suspend him on the grounds | of his being a known bad character. iw Even by Kennard's showing, he had | that ! poms been brought, and he had bee n | ed by the owners long belors| they had heard" of ine, Further, | Kennard much s just stranger to me, and for all I knew! ther after tiffin, quite as likely to be a scoundrel with some ulterior object of his own in view as was Zavertal. It was true 1 was prepossessed in the Pe erican's favor, while I had come octor ; but against this there was the set-off of the for- mer being a disguised man travelling under an alias-- a recommen- dation for implicit confidence. And yet it was a horrible strain stroy life. tioned suspicions in it Was strange that out of the three which Zavertal had indicated as serious on the first day i tarted at the these were two ought t ' herself, and it flashed upon me that Zavertal might have named these three cases in order to pave the way for tho fatal termination he meant t ccure, And yet where motive--what could be the induce- ment--for his turning his hand against three utterly unconnected strangers who could never have in- jurcd him ? The problem was beyond me, but I found temporary comfort in one Ghing--that for forty-eight hours at least there would be no fear of mis- alled owners, r could cable Nathan from Genoa "But t during the ensuing ttwenty- four-hours nothing happened to mar merrily, no sign eaerd filled the heart of the captain finding place amid the racket of jestivity that prevailed on board. Nennard, in' his resumed character . ype Waldo, = no fre the doctor pervade the sip with h his sata foreth comfort of all. As sick- ally aii re Was none on board, Lord | Darranmore having quite recovered | from: his last fit ; and, in short, as : aidapoted to Kennard next morn- ng, there eo no peg to hang a rag "of suspic ion on. "Wait,"' he 'tai turned away We were steaming steadily for the Molo Vecchio Genoa th quictly, and bustling, thriving streets of the ort in front to the stately groups The palaces beyon pa eeagure were all on deck, forming: parties and making plans to visit the pic- ture galleries and ancient city ; but I meant to "remain on board, in- ashamed to say, Aline and = Mrs, in- yet sufficiently torgotten the inplodnart incident at Gibraltar to I they suid. be anxious for more sight-seeing, We came to an anchor half an hour noon, and the shore parties no time in leaving the ship. thad be ceria to sin his al capacity of showman and master of ceremonies. When luncheon was c se served in the nearly deserted saloon, t Was therefore a surprise to seo ; him seated at the head of his | table, supported only by a sieve ' ander "oer-otR, Tho t my own table only Aline and | her companion took their places ; though half-way through the meal another surprise was forhconiny in the entrance of 'General Waldo,' ho explained that a twinge 3 of The Sufferings leach a opesttion when was-on-the poiht of letting ale stranger have '"'a bit 'of the skip- per's pr ok when he ch with a whispered injunction". "keep calm,' "Kennard, "Yes," me to we et stammered. shadow o ie There's something in the wind, Was waiting for that letter, Expect me back when you see me--in © character of Waldo, of course. taking the needful mak touching ried. may be repre- y al know." He was Pair the side and into a before : could reply, 'and y After settling idkters with the engineer, I went aft and spent the happiest time of the whole voyage, sitting with Aline under the awning all ee sa duty in which that good | tain that lady havir & been now taken' into fullest confidence, pefiormed -- very | lenient! nd rl and wer accord plenty of opportunity -- for | discussityy our future in the" good time of [reedcim which a few months |dians, to would bring, vi th midst. of an gtmument on the loss of | self-respect that would arise laden with vobacdine sight-seers to me we ought all to mate a point came eloneside. lof trying to show them the truth, Two milautes late © voice of Lp the most salicnt feature of our some one who had approac hed anadign climate is not the severity lentls tarde d me Oo a sense mabe the winter, but ood berfection of 5 ics jour summer and aut vite Captain Forres-| 'In Cseadn, stretching, from ocean neW-comer Wes saying. | to ocean and at one point from lati- "etter late then never, you see, | | tude 4 41 to ihe retic Ocean, the missed vou before, but rather han ;}climate is s aried, and dominating lose the trip altogéther I have hur- | cHovatie taflnenees liffer so materinl- ried on overland to join you here. It was Vizard, the pussenger w had fniled to put ia an appearance | when we ° left Londen, who as standing before tall, com. mandin. {eure was set off by a welleut tourist suit. and he carried | an expensive teavelling-rug o his arn in sWarths hands ome face looked courteousivy down a and he raised his hat in ithein of tbat that there was no mistake. I recog- nized his voice at onee, It was ™ voice which had been puzzling for the last three days--the voice in which Enriquez the stowaway had threatened me «from the landing- steps o oe harbor of Bareclona. » Be Cantinued.) CATARNE GUE ee OB. ts nent CURE 3 seme {9 the the spreneed AGE AND ITS POSSIBILITIES. Young Men Not Only Ones a SLORIOUS. CLIMATE nat = OF OUR SUMMER lee Avro. "An ( eaieg and eateuetive | aa- dress son tke "Catiadian Climate' was given. at the Cnsadian Club, Toronto/ recently, by Mr. ely climate, as amediturs depends on tomperature, sunshine, and moisture. must feed her own people, hink. that prolific whost "felis such a8 we possess in the Northwest Ter- ritories, and Manitoba, are the rich- | Republi and 'preference to ann and Cana- Aline was particularly) blame for this. ec | se aaron w ith | ofean be hest To was certain and Northern Spain and Italy; d under | Scowbank tae. 'tho larger portion of the year, that emigrants have in the |past chosen Australia, the Argentine the ---- States in Ca a certain extent, are to "MY LADY OF THE SNOWS end to England each Christ- many pictures of winter Our eee papers 'We & ings too li do moro to- | ™m a Part cluded, "I do not think there is any journey one can CJ th satisfaction an oF » finally, speeding along the margin of the rushing Fraser and thence to the Pacifice shores, I say again and again, this is my coun- try. a LORD KITCHENER'S WAY. An Instance of the Great Gen- acpount of "Campaigning with Kitchener'? in Blackwood's. He gives an instan eral's carefulne Once when our Mei the enemy threatened 'ublish pictures a kd oi snowshoes = slung ver the back, and our British rela- from | ties think that cone ians must be the Grert boat | very h Pe rear the Nort t seems | ly, that the perhaps, by separately, and endeavoring in aw words to give an idea of the normal Weather con- | ditions of the eral seasons "T wonder how ied Canadians Hhave realized that Toronto is 550 niles farther south 'en London; | Montreal 418 miler, and Halifax ATS | y miles. <A large portion of Ontario! as Southern aera nd: Southern Ontario is farther south than Rome, Also, parts of the Northwest Territoric s, i 1, inchiding Assiniboia, y south Alberta, n "NEATH THE ROCKIES' SHADE, "None of Canada's present wie flelds in.Manitoba and the | West Tertitories lie as far | Beaten; but I believe that in the t ht fu la will be found - from of communications I = some oe oe about wo rid t bearing the river pier. Down I ent search discovered se cunningly laid under the bush ges Fs As I Was about to ride back I saw farming our Province is onetf , = -- corr yaa of te THEY TAKE LIFE BASILY f th yreat gen- "ej of the g g 7 w a Cabinet Ministers quit work for what in the Plaza Bolivar. day there with him. Ther dance until 3 a. m. REASONS FOR ERLISTIN CUPID IS THE BEST RECEUIT- ING SERGEANT. - Adds Hundreds of Men to the Banks of the Ev- THE VENEZUELANS a WORRY ABOUT IT ANYTHING is 7a a, cr era -- The Venemelan, like ma ny anoth- er insolvent debtor, belicves in let- ah the other man rying. h You would be the youn fellow Aa a the army "os a cure for ' it c Were asked to who civil war was ae | | best recruiting neteeast © should un- hesitatingly answer,- Cupid; for he certainly iS & few hundreds men to our ranks every years ago I had the pleasu listing a sm. cold shoulder'* and to she "could never Lg of _| marrying u baker's assista: ' had, however, a w st f ma. -Yoar I was in Car- ee ap and La Victoria. At that time oe ria and os 7 x i, says a writer in the New York bt and Express. -- eral's Carefulness. s¢ international dispute was at ackss, 20 last resource my No man ever kept his own counsel |™oSt critical stage Everybody was io friend aiipatieet to on better than Lord Kitchener, when aid tha the allies might land oaiaee On es his master for the fighting was afoot. There was nev-|troops and 'seize the custom houses, months Py Ae a me and when a few er any leakage of information be-}bUt nobody worried about the mat- in. all the lg © prosecuted his suit cause there was never any informa-/| ter except the American Minister and esi ied pr leges uniform the dam- tion to le So writes a staf oMf-|the newspaper correspondents. The promieed to be im.no longer and cer in-his President himself, bored to death © become his e. with political business, went off n he came bac a week Teaving eeon af a tins FO ago from South Atrien covered with all 'the waren Most of hi glory he found his fiancee converted ' . 18 into a ge had married his suc- cessor in the baker's sho ie este Jilted lovers often find | a thing concerts months ago a fine, handso ome ¥ man came to me, looking very doj d and saying that he was sick and I followed e life the President out to of ending. my Ct rist | on Ve naa WANTED TO ENLIST. n the evening, which [s) Is fan was fast and clear enough when he confide d to i sed a girl oon bed loved passionately, and she i prettiest girls and making patriotic had refused him a meaner pushing. off om mer br speeches to the eons during the in-! 1 coul see that the boy--for ae ar ehigl officer on bo 5 ahead tervals. Ho had a ball every night, was little more--was a ntleman, as a t urned ou q O°! and most days Hedy ricnic -- a a different stamp from the he had personal instructions from we with more dancing in the ope: | mina but at was no Kitchener to lay a third line of ir 'under r Jie shade of the shelter- tl of mine, and of course I en- telegraph on the -- Big of Leer ing palm.'/ It sf not at gll iste im. e@ Was'not destin- Nile, and no one in my ensy task to get him to talk busi- ed to be a soldier; for a = weeks the chic! and this te onhear hed ness under these condition He righ so I learned, a carriage drove Wind of the matter. instinct of self-preserva- ever slept with more shut when Kitchener army. A sound sleeper in danger of finding him- pa alone in desert, and the army gone. This actually happened to a worthy officer 4 hard of hearing. pered, marched of drum ur The officer awoke, and in place jof twent¥ thousand men. found no- th living in sight except two | bal: i-headed vultures, Kite hener's officers took their cue and imitated his Fron an tion nobody than one eye Was with the tas-always & wn 2 =. 34 = ul t- Ss o inspecting a post o communications, and duly the little hut which represented r the shelter {\headquarters of the mnjesty of the rpeicer ~*~ Komp Ww raw ent, ciphy ie the Ami it fen fe cacetable and two ticketed aku Britain i- "tho. "Atlantic does "Excellent officer 1' purrs X, to Europe, lying between nearly the! "Th is his work same parellcly of latitude. The cli-}and Kitchener'a methods." But n all other sailed of "= when he went further, and procecded Who Itish 'Columbia, varies : The to examine the papers in the "Bosh"' complain that the city had reel !been so dull ft ix T ti FY c liveried footmen use in the square, had lost their in successive revolutions, and ,nomically. The nce a gencral officer Wa) still did a thriving business. | Venezuelan will spend his Ja will sell their swore 'to lo -w & cafe or ae one is n to Castro and his ministers as they | ise the barracks sontainene a mid- dio-nged lady and a very , sirl, who were ot my recruit's onather pool ie Young lady who had rejected him, and he was f riven away in trian, looking the- but th . Picture of happincss Another recruit who somo during the eal months of the rec iat: he =good old Spanish told m at he was threatened with nilies, whose handsome coaches and ®& breach of to cut a figure prudontly thought money would not oven open his telegrams SEEMED GAY TO VISTTORS. Caracan every day was no feas: bull Nights and cock Pg t that senson o bleu to live very quietly and . eco- fllow et an returne music" of the law courts, for he aed atehen two months shut up, b landing in South fric Forkure it would have been better if ho had all. st boli-| n a lottery ie rather than on a loaf bre There-is no deubt that many of the recruits who went out to urchin. Even in the President's pal- oO eee wife- them. I was | heard to declare, -- = oon when a boy did dr ken wife, who had mls his a brisk business selling these tickets life and brought disgrace on him, It is not at all een gout had warned him at the last n Do Original Work. !nual rainfall along the peace! ale truy, he found that the documents | emerged from a heen meeting. * | thing for a man- who has e been moment to stay on board. We speak of this as the age of 'ern coust is great, generally exceed-| consisted exclusively of his own! fy en in his business atfairs e lan br ag in the army to 'enter it {Quite right, General," Zavertal | un 5 on "it s the custom in the !& one hundred inches, but the| voluminous orders and memoranda. | Venezuclan is a delightfully eapon: ag as a private. I per- called across ie the other table ; res ak - riny to ~ get rid of the More eastern districts it is less than sible person. One morning, th- 'gonally several cases of this 'kind -- oo, om taking a rest to-day. ole alicers nnd promote the young half that amount 0 e ern A HAUNTED HOU! HOUSR. or correspondent and inyself, having | one of a captain who had heen n- a} We will have a game of chess toge- rapidly, becaue . it is supposed | te of the Straits of Georgi he i occasion to catch an carly train to duced by his friends to throw up his = po Oe that they are more efficient, says the |S!™mNer eciuediy warm. & re, | See Castro at La Victoria had break-:commission, but who tired But, though nec assented oh al at nl. It not infrequent | Agassiz, on the Lower Fraser, gland, a beautiful place, with | fast at a cafe where we were un-, Of civil-life that he joined the army his feigned voice nd pronounced }j,, happens in medical schools. that | Miles from Vancouver, the lowest goed ooting, stands empty {known. Being in a hurry, we for-. @gain as a pri . drawl the game aan n destined | sh, pach nan is given preference te mneratare on record is 18; the!cause successive owners have foun op he proprietor was far! Another case was that of a young to come off between them--at least eg BT /- lnaiy heeauko the highe 97. Frosts seldom occur | it impossible to k ny serve oo polite to remind us of the fact, Meutenant in the:Guards who came n over a chess-board, A minuto} {2 We besition, 'ts 2 : coma 46 he Jin Mey, and there is no record of; there. A booted something enters | when we went back a few days after- into a fortune. He left the army, or two leter a steward brought Za- Reten, cuore to "the atilation, on | &hy during summer months. re Pri a oe door, ergo vo hell, | ward and paid him, we him | squander: vertal a letter, and informed him} vecount. of the greater amount of Yale and West Kootenay -- §, |) ascends the -- i cilpsashie i why he had not called us back, con- FIFTY THOUSAND POUNDS boi it had been brought by a boat! orisinal work that he is likely to ren ce ane colder 4 't © vanwnt |down and cantarorr aes Tee ace oa side in --_ "a bid "ip cre absolute ; in a little over two years, and then, the shore. hurried] me 5 be i slag pg okera a strangers to hat wou € literally to save himself from star- reading it. the doctor | caine ov re perform. _lnieet, it gaatea te ~-- ainous region of East Kootenay the} then - -- The - at nag of |, quite imposs esible," " he said, th his | ation unin haale the ranks. He us and aid I st go ashore })) te 35 ye x nt x he is unlike- winters' sre foklor agalo, but "the is P ania he na are a . ened geen great air and an claborate bow. (has now reached the --. of rail after all, I find. "Lave ust hoard efore oF ) f Bid " the suinmers are warmer, and bi stood on t Stairs an ear Me We could never --_ menttomen! geant-major, and I expec an dx: J ly to achieve much ufterward. Age winters not so cold as in St. Pete footsteps pass between _ i k fterward found he an old student friend of mine however, is merely a relative term. | py their dogs, one a mastift, ha e- (in this was the ft linn spirit ri fo hear ae e has panty a OF einnitee at is staying in Geno few th ana \ ; . 5 . o as , sion a: ain dupe. and he wants se to apend 80 [etic thet one ma semeg| SUMMER IN THE ANCTIC. | |mained fasalvad with errors thle |ihe Vengruclane in tonne in Ca|""Ohe Sotig flow wom. sea hour or tw th him at the Hotel at ao. re hiie another is old at 80., 'The climate of the territory which | 7!" y & cas, Pr quiently we "ett 'cafes and !told me er his object in seeoriing de Genes, Our game of chess must There are so many illustrations that tii es Cn age age to the cast of the Eethn 7 other places t paying = a soldier Was to get out to India, be postponed, I am afraid, Gen- can he cited of green old men that | Mountair ne of peculiar inter- WHAT PLANTS CAN LIFT. shot,"' and once "eS . act! which had always fascinated him, al.' Sedu uSeless to lay stress upon lest, irese! ting features in countries| 1t has been found by experim#nts | ever called to jal degel ola pe He was a clever youth pe _ There Was o trace of suppressed this point, And vet. when we think |Bear the sea and away from the that the force oving pump-|Zuelans trusted = fc pl al a degr London University, ascitemnent in his tone, and he turn-} oy peorier and the enormous amount| mountains, Among the marked fea-|kin was sufficient to lift two and a:|™member wi pey nex ar A i at but was much too p & ed ft the saloon at once. of mel) al wark that, 'haa ap reared | tures are rapid changes in temper-|half tons, provided the weight is so|Well, they would just wri o oe © | trip to the East a own X- Kennard exchanged a meaning glance |? ove cbelehre,. we aiist ! sause | ature, hich frequently oc in| placed as not to interfere with thefProtit a nd loss. sg treat their} pense. Well, he got out to India with me, but finished a yarn with in_bia, Gewebelenre <stivusl site liy | Short intervals of time, and the fact| growth or natural development of|OWn countrymen in the same way, | and made such good use of his op- which he was amusing Aline with. before vaunting too - vusiastically at the summer season in the Great | the vegetable. In London a paving-|but the fereaporllidiiter of the race!portunitics for studying the mater out ma! y reference to the| the advantages of youth Mackenzie basin, just under the Arc-/ stone, which weighed 500 pounds, |S0metimes induces the latter to for-/janguages that he has now got doctor's, altered arrangements, When! , "Rother 'en furnished by von | ti¢ Circle, is nearly as warm as in' and which was wedged on all sides | get tke debt. . . excellent position as inspector of ne- N adjourned to the upper deck | R88 recently been furnished by von) Adi crea |by other stone, was lifted up by a EVEN THE BANKS, tive sclbole gnd.co A Kupffer. O. Hertwig requested him . 5 ' : ; Many recruits join tke army for T clearly made out oe @ quar- anh = mt *Whil in Alberta the winter!mushroom. The growth of big!which in most countries are he Itt Onl ri ks r of a mile away boat) tO. Frite the article. up i ' 'le months are in some cases excessively | gum tree at Cinerias, Honduras, rest of business institutions, | Teasons o alth. fos bel -- bb that was being r apidly pulled to the | Yelopment of ae hh dar {cold, scarcely a month goes by w with- | moved ee wails of a concrete church|share in the national characteristic. | 980 I enlisted Feet ee cee nearest €anding-stg urning ie ayecem tox; He) Ine. (Handbue Win. out ore or 1 eaks, when the! three thickness cightcen | One day 1 cashed=-a sabia draft for ; man . ares tho ito corte oak call ""Waldo's "' atg*tion to 1 x Vv ee, ees temperature exceeds 40 above, al inches in seventeen years. 4 | s200 in notes of oe ef Vene- ing ¢ separ etaet Pp sn Kin: ie he said: fact, I found that the detective had foe ie heeds he Bupter acted at times upwards of 50 ----e--e zuela. Next day th sak suspended 4 7 po i ihe el, eeprentes: to write the article ns a result. of-|est temperature at Calgary in Jan WRECK 200 YEARS OLD. payment, and nobody as Die in te Gectes 'wai jouer, Ten minutes afterwards I was] pj, i uary, 1902, was 58, on the 28rd, relieve me of my wad of notes 1*Why don't you join-t y? it ~ 2 own original and independent and at Edmonton, on the 22nd, For over 200 years the old sev- Naturally, T was ther concerned; | Vv do y h d observations. He was then 70 years 1902, 52. nty-ton frigate 'Anne,'" which was | the manager of the hotel anid: struck t ne : "" goo ord. in order the hetter to carry on | eee PAIRY TALES crippled and) run ashore of Dus-| "Don't worry' The bank does this MT dome bellows wenty. mam 000 his- , e resigned his teaching . can | geness in AdmirafThrrington's battle | cort of thing c now and then I don't believe 7 --_ pe position at the university spe "The storica wo have been accus"i with the French fleet In 1690, has} put it generally ee "pavivent ie sober with any ee ° pony: and ve hours every day at the Ana-!tomed to, of temperatures frequently 'Jain imbedded in the sands. Thel, fow d Sure ugh, in a I was much amuse yy one you tomical Institute, and then dovoted | more than 50 below ard and, oc- hulk now shows plainly at low tides | oon is { a was resum- recruil, about three years who oman - ane Se gr Week apn eel oie Ls d hat his only reason for en- w |all his afternoons and evenings until |casionally, 70 or 80 ""-.ciose in to the shore. It is stated! og, and iny wad of notes was nt me t y er Re Midnight to his library and desk. ious. To find cor 'in eo that there are still on board some of | rig * oat -banks atk was to win the t Many Irregularities, and an . come by Using DR. CHASE'S No woman can expect to a only causes much pain and Pe te 'but may make her an invalid f rest of life. Nearly all derangements of the feminine organism are due to thin wwatery blood, a_poor circulation or Jack of nerve force. Whether the menses are irregular, insufficient rofuso or painful the use trouble rests with the condition of 'the blood and nerves, and soon dis- appears when _-- are restored to ealth and vigo neehe. dull, fa pain, in the back .end thighs, the cramps in the we the ressing hea' x on Pier of d- Misery Which Can be Permanently Over- Weaknesses, Much Pain NERVE FOOD. It is usually in girlhood that these irregularities have: their beginnings, hence, motbers, the ty o looking h of yo daughters during the peri change. A few words of advice this point may save them | from a life of ill-health and mise: om girlhood to the change in life, for the nursing mother and at every trying time in woman's life, Dr. Chase's erve Food is of ines- timable value, "scl it forms new red blood, insures woos | circulation and revitali the wasted and de- pleted nerve cells. It. gives a f Dr. Chase Food is cont po of nature's most powerful storatives and cannot fail to benc- ait ~ 5O ony a box, at dealers, or tes & Co.4 Tor 4 --, and Was unremitting in his efforts. I the work was completed. = contained oreviously use thoritatively all the not, ther spe ingly of the abilities of many years. ----___4+___--_--. A consequential-looking nome ue D of entered the commercial ro Dublin hotel not long oak and gave a vigorous pull at the bell. As no one answered loudly than 3 a 7 vant then came following colloquy took place: ant--"Who rang i Serv. Ani ko lifted pa up to it?' ' Sige "You de deny " persistently that you committed the act, and yet -- memeztotion fits you exac + yo pretty iitle 'toot # Judge, I common, one they are not to be roles in Canada. ~ Pade clin 'There arc only two instances of 'ds; 60 below 'a 50 below only annual months is ab three | kn winter months, 16 below are, et uary 23 below. Spring ope -- end of Apri Market wson aM a large @ |morthern al districts of the Mackenzie THE ir Fon CAPITAL, "I feel hat the capital witch builds gl through our ae country- will not be capital éinte railways will be open- ie up aN inhabited portions 'a. the gio oe Maniteba, especially, the far- eed dreught; and, ° Am age, yet | there be little doubt that faa wheat growing and mixed { [ee hrass guns n mn countries which contracted a habit of | shut- s more grit in the lad than worry the public; out . sthowght, for oe int not been ink Vonezucla th ey take the the front more than six months | ARMS AND LEGS ARE CROOKED matter : i i vV.c A physician - ro. sonsible for She | philosophically pieces emit eomntie 'etore be actually id vhuaed than statement that every wom. . jmyself to hear of it cith er crooked arms or crooked lee jer aga ain. | Proforsure of gymnastics say mu uch | g. either kn near or bow-legged, pal ve. ; anc a very 'ces. attributed to tight sleeves, tight SAVING BURGLARS TROUBLE. no- of one of the tramway companies of Pa beg to inform burglars that we do not -- money or val- uables an ir depots during '" requested fact among the pani te to gsary trouble rand | loss of time, CONVICT'S QUICK CHANGE. A Europenn prisoner named Ern Jores, ho was doing twelve months' bc: labor at Cape Town, to slip ato the turnkey's arters, and change his gao) He then walked calmly out of prison and escaped, 'bring home aists, and tight corsets, lof avoid unne- ee f an him in that pastime. We ing, and then and marc over the country, « ery reason to be profound- ly miserable, the Verezuclans struck n g the gayest people in -- "ceived by an mg Nothing could bas kman 'Ho Sir --I ardor for enjo: _gpriene not IT cannot say when to them the ps Ties '1 shall be well enough to be able to' their affairs me cafe one even-! come bac 'he doctor g we met o 'famous aaah innit 98 ys Tha information of the left er, Gen. Ramon Moreno, or lung, which I ho ope wiil meet with {tro's most trusted officers. te pers your approval." ™ fancy to "los Peper ge : ae . oom told om that ie was Mainchance -- "I lead his army out ned battte with the revolutionists the-next day. Now, | Mr. ral ---- The following note was recently re- from an' ab- nored of ying gn. as busy "painting 'the own 're and wanted us to 1 dea, at -he 'tiad~ 'tty: Oh She (poetically) -- set glorious, Hiaroes red an Ig a discovered later th ai usand,;" man- 4 o escape from him* soo soon, but Tan't that sun- we heard aitarwaxd that he went the The bars of gree are Nature's n p head of his troops as fresh as paint, | in thing, hed thirty miles into | think whether it's atone econ or, rel o' sliced tesa' 'Oo around a street corner two of these men, one of whom was ~ y

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